President
Idriss Deby of Chad
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Chadian President Idriss Deby is optimistic that Boko Haram
insurgency will end by the end of the year. He said the combined effort by the
Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF) has succeeded in ‘decapitating’ the
terrorists, adding that “the group would be wrapped up by the end of the year.” President Deby, who was
addressing reporters in N’Djamena, the capital city, on the 55th anniversary of
Chad’s independence from France, also informed that the terrorists have picked
Mahamat Daoud as their new leader.
Deby said: “Boko Haram is
decapitated. There are little groups (of Boko Haram members) scattered
throughout east Nigeria, on the border with Cameroon. It is within our power to
definitively overcome Boko Haram. The war will be short, with the setting up of
the regional force, it will be over by the end of the year.”
The Nation report
continues:
He added that the 10,000
MNJTF strong force put together by the Chad Basin countries of Nigeria, Niger,
Chad, Cameroon and Republic of Benin has a mandate to end Boko Haram’s bloody
six-year insurgency.
According to the Chadian
leader, the force would be “operational in a few days”.
Deby further claimed that
Boko Haram was no longer led by the fearsome Abubakar Shekau and that his
successor was open to talks.
He said: “There is
someone apparently called Mahamat Daoud who is said to have replaced Abubakar
Shekau and he wants to negotiate with the Nigerian government.
“For my part, I would
advise not to negotiate with a terrorist,” Deby, whose country has been
spearheading the regional anti-Boko Haram fight, said.
While claiming progress
in the fight against the terrorists, who have repeatedly hit border areas of
Cameroon, Chad and Niger, and wrought havoc in northeast Nigeria, Deby admitted
that suicide bombers still posed a threat.
In the past few weeks,
suicide bombers, many of them women, have staged several attacks in Nigeria,
Cameroon and Chad.
The challenge, Deby said,
was to “avoid terrorist acts and that’s why we must organize at the regional level
to prevent bomb-making materials and other explosives entering our countries.”
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